Title of article
Information management and behavior problems: Is concealing misbehavior necessarily a sign of trouble?
Author/Authors
Laird، نويسنده , , Robert D. and Marrero، نويسنده , , Matthew D.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
12
From page
297
To page
308
Abstract
This study sought to determine whether adolescentsʹ strategic management of information about their misbehavior was associated with behavior problems and whether the associations were moderated by parental trust or adolescent authority beliefs. Data were provided by 218 mother-adolescent dyads. Adolescents (49% female; M age = 12 years) reported their use of two disclosing (i.e., telling all, telling if asked) and three concealing (i.e., omitting details, secret keeping, lying) strategies following misbehavior. More disclosing and less concealing were associated with less depressed mood and with less antisocial and rule-breaking behavior. Associations between strategy use and antisocial and rule-breaking behavior were attenuated when parents reported high trust or adolescents reported strong authority beliefs. Greater use of concealing strategies following misbehavior is more likely to be a sign of trouble than a sign of emerging autonomy, but the negative effects of concealment are attenuated in some relational contexts.
Keywords
Information Management , Concealment , disclosure , lying , Behavior Problems , Trust , Authority beliefs , Secrecy
Journal title
Journal of Adolescence
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Journal of Adolescence
Record number
1495584
Link To Document